Kickstart something

Now here’s a great idea: crowdsource the funding for your art project.

Kickstarter helps artists find small-dollar patrons. They’ve got a pledge approach to funding, an interesting and sensible all-or-nothing policy for the artist, and they’ll take 5% of the money if and only if you reach the full level of funding.

I love that the internet makes this kind of activity not only possible, but inevitable somehow. Artists have always been supported by community, directly or indirectly; and now “community” can be any of us with a computer and some change in our pocket. Go check it out. Be a patron. Post a project. Create, share, connect.

Enjoy your day.

You all rock

Thank you all so much for making Sterling Editing‘s first day at the party such a fun time. We’ve had more than 1,200 visitors already, and we’re so grateful to all of you for taking the time to come and look around, watch our editcast, check out the example edit, read the blog — and then share it via Twitter, Facebook, Myspace, Digg, and everywhere else. It’s this kind of support that will make it all work — and you know we want it to work (grin).

We appreciate it very much.

And you rock.

Back tomorrow with other content. But right now, back to spreading the word!

Sterling Editing

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Nicola and I are jazzed to announce the launch of Sterling Editing — editing, mentoring and coaching services for writers. If you want to make your writing better, we can help you.

It’s a joy to help people with their work. I love to mentor and coach, and the most valuable part of that isn’t explaining theory or technique: it’s working with a writer on a piece of text to make it cleaner, deeper, brighter, more true. Seeing the oh! moment when the writer leaps from a specific suggestion to an understanding of how their work can always be better.

Nicola and I have been helping friends and students this way for more than 20 years: and one day this summer, we looked at each other and said Well, let’s expand our horizons. Let’s help anyone who needs it. And from that — its own kind of oh! moment — came Sterling Editing.

We’re here for everyone from new writers to professionals; we’re here for all genres, for stories, novels, essays, collections, and memoir. It’s all exciting, and it’s all a chance to help writers find their place in writing, or find the path to the next place they want to take their work.

Our marvelous website is created by writer and web designer Karina Meléndez, and on it you’ll find a description of our services, an example of our editing, and an ever-growing list of articles and resources to help writers. We hope you’ll like it.

Good editors don’t just fix text: good editors strengthen writers by giving them skills, understanding, specific examples, and the confidence to keep on trying. That’s what I love. And that’s what Nicola and I plan to do with Sterling Editing.

I’m so excited!

A moment to contemplate heaven

Imagine these churches right across the street from each other.

And watch the conversation unfold…
(Thanks to K for sending this my way!)
 
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If there is a heaven, it should definitely include rocks and dogs and all the rest of us.

This religious war of the words isn’t real — it’s the creation of someone’s fertile imagination and the judicious use of the church sign maker. Anyone can do it. You can do it…

Sometimes I just love people and the things we can do.

Enjoy your day.

Those crazy kids got married

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photo by Mark Tiedemann

…16 years ago today.

Love is a four-letter word spelled T-I-M-E. — Unknown

Today I don’t give a damn about other people who want so badly to see us not married; I’m sad for them that they aren’t us, and I hope that they have even one percent of the love in their lives that I have in mine. Today is not about rights or legality or the politics of fear: I didn’t need any government’s permission to marry 16 years ago, and I still don’t.

Marriage is about making each other better. And today is about how much better I am in every way because of Nicola.

Drive

A friend is thinking about moving to New York, and the other day she said, I wouldn’t need a car, but I’ll really miss driving.

I grew up in a time and place that was all about driving. Not so much the 16th-birthday ritual of the license and the my-own-car visions that come with it, but driving as a way of life. Our city wasn’t big enough to have urban neighborhoods with everything you need in walking distance. The bus system was okay but not great, and there were no subways or light rail. I’d only ever seen subways in movies until I lived in Chicago; although the Busch Gardens Theme Park in Tampa did have a monorail, even before Disneyworld. It’s amazing what makes you proud when you’re eight.

Every adult I knew drove. Some of the cars were old and clunky; some were pickup trucks; some were Porsches (our little city was a pretty big world in certain ways). I loved being taken to school in my dad’s 1960-something black Barracuda; I loved it even more when he bought a (retired) hearse and drove that for a while (much more storage room than a station wagon….). Every once in a while we’d get up early on a Sunday morning and drive to the shopping plaza (yep, this was before the mall, before the internet, before VHS, before CDs, and even before Paul McCartney and Wings — I am practically an historical relic). All the plaza stores were closed on Sundays, the parking lot was empty, and Dad would put me on his lap behind the wheel and let me steer. When I was tall enough to reach the pedals, he let me drive.

My mom and dad were both excellent drivers: smart, safe, fast, precise, full of the joy of controlled speed on an open road. We often spent weekends in auto rallies and autocross: my mom drove, my dad navigated, and I sat in a pillow nest in the backseat and read a book, or watched the road, or listened to my folks work out the clues. One night, after one of these rallies, there was the usual association dinner with door prizes, and I was asked to draw the prize tickets. I think I was maybe nine, and the only kid there… the grownups never seemed to mind because I stayed quiet and still, ate my food, and just listened. It’s amazing what adults will say around a child who is just listening… No one was ever evil or gross, but they were perhaps more revealing than they might have intended. (Never mind about the time we all went skinny-dipping in the hotel pool after the Daytona 500; that wasn’t evil or gross either, but revealing in a whole different way…)

Anyway, this night the group president decided I should draw the tickets. We got to the big prize — a set of four very nice Semprit radials. My dad called out from his table, “Go ahead, honey, win us those tires!” And I said, “Okay, Daddy,” reached into the fishbowl (which was over my head, I couldn’t see into it), and pulled out his name.

What could they do? They gave him the tires. That was a nice night.

Before I drove a car, I drove my bike. I talked about riding it, but in my heart I was driving. I drove with precision and grace. I drove often with no hands up hills and down them, around tight corners, never falling, never being afraid (I was pretty physically timid in other ways, but never on my bike, even with no hands). There was nowhere I didn’t go: huge arterial streets, back alleyways, the best neighborhoods, gravel streets with no sidewalks where big dogs growled behind chain-link fences, commercial strips with bars and auto shops, the 5-mile sidewalk along the bay and the big bridge across the water to the hospital; for a girl on her bike, that busy bridge was the best hill available in three counties. It was Florida: the only hills we had were the ones we built ourselves.

I took my Driver’s Ed in a big boat of an American automatic transmission car, but real driving for me has always been stick. My first two cars were standard transmission Toyota Corollas. Sturdy little mechanically-reliable fast red cars. I felt like the Queen of the World in those cars, and I could drive. I knew how to downshift at the curves, how to upshift by the sound of the engine, how to control a skid, how to change a tire, and (one-hair raising evening) how to escape from a car of drunk men trying to run me off the road. I have driven tens of thousands of miles alone across the US. I know the rhythms of the road at 3 AM, when truckers own the highways and will take care of you as long as you know the rules; at noon in the busy DC – Baltimore corridor where the roads always seem to be under construction; over the Appalachian passes in Tennessee, where you’d better know what second gear is for on some of the steeper grades, and where in earlier days you could find the best breakfasts in America. I know the location of every Burger King between Chicago and Tampa. I can eat an entire meal while driving in interstate traffic. I have slept in my car on the side of the road. I have followed exits just to see where they go: I’ve always liked a mystery drive. I do not get lost for more than a few minutes, ever: not because I’m so brilliantly directional, but because I know I am a driver, and drivers keep moving until they find their way to, or find their way back.

I miss riding the clutch on a hill waiting for the light to change. I miss seeing the surprised face of the guy in the Trans Am in my rearview mirror. I miss the hundreds of miles of open road between me and any of my problems, when the only thing that I can do is put on the music and drive. I miss fifth gear. And I sure as hell would miss driving.

Gender 101

Thanks to Cheryl Morgan for this cogent post on Gender 101. Read it, share it.

And with that I love you and leave you, as the English say: today is a Day of Many Errands, and so here I go, run run run on the outside but peaceful on the inside, into the mist that looks determined to hang on as long as it can. Into September. I will be thinking about life and love and story and work, about choices, about the funny squeaking sound the car is making right now, about eggs over easy, about the sass of Seattle crows, and every time I hear someone laugh, I will be happy.

Enjoy your day.

Queer matters

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I’ve been with Nicola for 21 years. I’ve been out as bisexual for most of that time. I have been writing fiction that overtly questions assumptions about gender and sexual identity/expression, or that simply assumes all the options are equally good, for much of that time. Kids, I’ve been a little transgressive in my day, and it has been/still is fun.

More to the point, it just shouldn’t matter. Honestly, who cares? Well, that’s the thing: lots of people who are getting bullied or beaten, ostracized, shamed and othered for being queer — those people care. Because it’s easier to be oneself in the face of bullshit when you can see other people being a little like you.

That’s why queer fiction is important: because it makes space for stories in which a reader can find people being a little like her, no matter how unlike her they might seem when she’s riding the subway to work. Maybe it’s a part of herself she’s always embraced but never seen made heroic in her culture. Maybe it’s something she responds to with that frisson of recognition: wait, wait, I’ve felt that way… Maybe it’s exciting, or inspiring, or comforting, or just plain fun. What matters is that it is.

We all live in this world. We’re all human, every single one of us, whether some of us like it or not. We all have stories; we should all be able to tell them, and to see ourselves reflected in others’ stories with all our human complexity, with all our faults, with all our pain and joy and love and truth.

And that’s why I joined The Outer Alliance, a group of SF/F writers, readers, bloggers, editors and reviewers who have come together as allies for queer speculative fiction. Anyone of any gender or sexual orientation is welcome. You don’t have to be queer. You don’t have to be “different.” You just have to believe that it’s okay to write stories where people who are queer, who are different, may find themselves the heroes, the lovers, the fighters, the caregivers, the family, the center, part of a spectrum rather than the lonely little satellite on the outer fringes.

The Outer Alliance mission statement is: As a member of the Outer Alliance, I advocate for queer speculative fiction and those who create, publish and support it, whatever their sexual orientation and gender identity. I make sure this is reflected in my actions and my work.

That’s me. If it’s you too, then please come on over. Today you’ll find many links to many blogs where people are posting their queer writing, talking about queer stories, offering support, and in some cases being brave enough to show parts of themselves that they don’t always reveal.

And in the spirit of the day, here’s a reminder that available here for free are the decidedly queer “And Salome Danced” and “Dangerous Space”, as well as an essay Nicola and I wrote recently about queer fiction.

Sunday advice

It’s Sunday. I have the world’s longest list of stuff to do, mostly things I am pleased to be doing. There will be music, sausage for breakfast and vegetable beef marrow soup for lunch, lots and lots of lovely tea all day, screenwriting and a little fiction and some work on a New Project Coming Soon that Nicola and I are very excited about; and then off to dinner with a friend.

I want you to have a nice day too. So please, go here and follow the instructions.

And enjoy your day.

Agora

Love movies. Love epic stories. Love ancient history (I was amazingly fortunate in my education — I got ancient Egyptian, Greek and Roman history in junior high school, along with Latin, Shakespeare and the kind of geography where the test is “draw a map of Africa on a blank piece of paper and then fill in all the countries”… but I digress. Ah well, why should today be any different?)

And here is the trailer for the ancient-history-epic-movie Agora, directed by Alejandro Amenábar (whose work has always struck me as marvelously attuned to both the “big picture” of a film and the internal landscapes of the characters in it), and starring the brilliant Rachel Weisz as — wait for it — Hypatia of Alexandria.

And it’s Saturday! How much better does it get?

Enjoy your day.